Special Message
Shabbat Corner
All Passover service times can be found on the Passover Hub
Shabbat and Erev Passover Service: 6:00 p.m. (Zoom)
Candle Lighting: 7:51 p.m.
Passover Morning Service: 9:30 a.m. (Zoom)
Mincha Service: 1:00 p.m. (Zoom)
Candle Lighting and Second Seder: 8:35 p.m. (counting of the Omer begins)
Saturday Biblical Readings:
Torah: Leviticus 14:1-15:33 | Maftir Aliyah: Number 28:16-25
Sunday Biblical Readings:
Torah: Leviticus 22:26-23:44 (Aliyot 1-5) | Maftir Aliyah: Number 28:16-25 | Haftara: 2 Kings 23:1-9, 21-25
Torah Commentary with Rabbi Laurence Rosenthal:
Pesach 5782 – The Torah of Passover
MaNishma by Rabbi Arnold Goodman:
The Two New Moons
Parsha Video of the Week (~15 min):
Shira Kecht-Koller, "Crafting Order from Chaos"
Passover Video (~60 min):
Making Sense of Maggid – Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, Hadar Yeshiva
Feel-Good News
Events
Other Things Happening at AA
We are looking for nominations for The Marvin C. Goldstein and Rita Goldstein Wolfson Volunteer of the Year Award (presented to a volunteer who has shown outstanding efforts to strengthen our congregation and community) to be presented at the Annual Meeting in June. To submit recommendations, please contact Jackie Nix ([email protected]; 404.603.5743). Along with names, please include the rationale behind your recommendations. Each recommendation received will be vetted and researched by our clergy, professional staff, and officers for final award determinations.
Extra regular-size cards available! To order your card(s), please email Barbara Nathan ([email protected]) with a list of names and addresses of all recipients so they can receive their cards in the mail. To pay, please write a check, payable to AA Sisterhood, and mail to Barbara Nathan (200 Brandon Place, Sandy Springs, GA 30328). Regular card = $9
- Fully vaccinated adults (16 years old and above) and individuals who have fully recovered from a documented COVID-19 infection in the last six months may attend indoor activities with or without a mask.
- If you are not vaccinated or have not recovered from a COVID-19 infection in the last six months (natural immunity), we invite you to use our virtual platform to participate with our community.
- If you are immunocompromised, a high-risk individual, or spend time around others who are, we encourage you to continue the use of masks when attending synagogue functions.
- For programs that share spaces with kids under five years old, including Family Shabbat, Kesher, and holiday celebrations, we will continue to require masks while inside the building for all attendees. We will always strive for outdoor gatherings for these communities whenever the weather cooperates.
We are hopeful that we are in the final stages of this pandemic, and we can continue to go from strength to strength (Hazak, Hazak, vNet'hazek). As we slowly reemerge from these difficult two years, there will be anxiety, concern, and caution. We anticipate some people will continue to wear masks. It is understandable to still be nervous about removing our masks indoors. Whatever choice you make regarding masks, we ask that, in the spirit of the cohesive and empathetic community that we are, you respect the choices that others make, even if you disagree with them. We will be monitoring the CDC recommendations carefully and will continue to adjust as we know more; this might mean that we revert to more stringent protocols if guidance changes. We appreciate your understanding, support, and patience as we continue to navigate these unprecedented times.
We are excited to move forward in aligning Ahavath Achim with United Synagogues of Conservative Judaism's (USCJ) membership section of Standards for Congregational Practice: "We celebrate diversity among and within our synagogues and encourage the engagement of all those who seek a spiritual and communal home in an authentic and dynamic Jewish setting." Most of us have or know Jewish families with loved ones of other faiths. Embracing these families will allow us not only to support their Jewish growth and identity with AA, it will also help them create a Jewish home of their own. To this end, we will soon be introducing proposed changes to our by-laws
Donate to the Ukraine Emergency Fund of Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta